• Welcome Visitor! Please take a few seconds and Register for our forum. Even if you don't want to post, you can still 'Like' and react to posts.

Prerunner RC Build


One thing the desert guys always stress on is have the shocks at 90° at bump.

You should angle the shocks back a bit. If you have the room then locate the shocks further back near the radius arm. (Back side of the beam). This will give you more useable shock and get more travel with a shorter shock.
 
One thing the desert guys always stress on is have the shocks at 90° at bump.

You should angle the shocks back a bit. If you have the room then locate the shocks further back near the radius arm. (Back side of the beam). This will give you more useable shock and get more travel with a shorter shock.

I had a reply with an image but that wasn't making sense. 90 degrees at bump for the shock? 90 degrees to what?

I do plan on moving the upper shock mounts on the chassis back just a bit.
 
Last edited:
when the beams are at full bump, you want the shock at a 90 to the beam. this gives it a progressively stiffer rate all the way up to full bump. if they were past 90 you would have a falling rate as it got closer to bump which is not a good thing, if it were less then 90 your not getting the full performance possible out of the shock.
 
What part of the beam though? The centerline of the hub? You can't measure angles based on the beams surface because those surfaces don't have anything to do with suspension tuning. Does that make any sense?
 
the part of the beam where the shock sits whereever that may be. Kinda hard to explain in writing, and I gotta leave work right now, but think about the motion of the shock in relation to the beam for awhile, maybe itll click.
 
Is the angle you are referring to measured from the side view or front view? I don't understand how you can base an angular measurement off a surface of something that isn't relative to anything else. The beams surfaces change on looks. Ill try and make a few drawings tomorrow and throw some angles on them so you can reply. I like this stuff. It makes me think!
 
Well the bed is cut off, pulled the headlights and grill and cut out the fake engine.

IMG_0313sm.jpg


Started on the cab wall. After I got the piece cut out I realized that they painted the clear window blue to try and make it look like part of the cab wall. I'm going to redo it and cut that part off the window so the window is clear only and make the cab wall all one piece.

IMG_0311sm.jpg
 
After thinking about this last night I think I know where you guys are coming from so I did a quick drawing to show what angles my setup had. If it's not 90 degrees to the beam them leverage works against you.

Shock_Angle_Compressed2.jpg
 
Still waiting on a few things to work out before getting into the good stuff. Managed to cut out the cab wall and get it glued into place. I'll get it smoothed out next.

IMG_0325sm.jpg
 
After thinking about this last night I think I know where you guys are coming from so I did a quick drawing to show what angles my setup had. If it's not 90 degrees to the beam them leverage works against you.

Shock_Angle_Compressed2.jpg

Now from the side shot it should also be about 90° to the rad arms.

Just so you know that your not the first to use this body for a RC model. Old user by the name Jubean made a crawler out of his. Was pretty badass.

This one of yours is shaping up to be pretty wicked also.
 
Last edited:
Just so you know that your not the first to use this body for a RC model. Old user by the name Jubean made a crawler out of his. Was pretty badass.

I've known about these bodies for years. I know of 3 or 4 (one being local) that have been made into crawlers that are great looking rigs. Haven't seen a prerunner yet though :icon_thumby:
 
I personally would have left the fake motor under the hood so you could hide the electric motor underneith it. I was looking at building a 1/10th truggie, but this is sweet. I hope to see this as a complete project someday. Even though this is only 1/6th scale, it still qualifies as a ranger... besides, Its all to scale to look like the real thing

BTW What program are you using to map out you TIB front suspension?
 

Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad

TRS Events

Member & Vendor Upgrades

For a small yearly donation, you can support this forum and receive a 'Supporting Member' banner, or become a 'Supporting Vendor' and promote your products here. Click the banner to find out how.

Recently Featured

Want to see your truck here? Share your photos and details in the forum.

Ranger Adventure Video

TRS Merchandise

Follow TRS On Instagram

TRS Sponsors


Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad


Amazon Deals

Sponsored Ad

Back
Top